Showing posts with label Interview Pattern and Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview Pattern and Tips. Show all posts

PMP EXAM TIPS- Windows Calculator

As you prepare for your PMP Exam, you should know that there are many formulas that you will be expected to know. Among them are Earned Value, PERT, discounted value etc.

You are not permitted to use your own personal calculator as few participants do save formulas in there.
However, some of the calculations you will be required to use a calculator and hence get yourself used to Microsoft Windows-based calculator.
It’s important for you to be prepared for all facets of your PMP Exam, and being comfortable with the Windows calculator should be included in your preparation.
Best of Luck 
Tutioncentral Team
http://tutioncentral.com

Free Practice PMP Test:  http://tutioncentral.com/practice-tests
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The Commandments of Salary Negotiation

Answering the salary expectation question right might be the wrong answer.
Just because they know your current salary or salary expectations doesn't mean you can't negotiate for a fair market value.
They will want you to reveal your salary history, but hold fast, and win the job offer before you establish your salary negotiation.
Saying ''OK'' or ''yes'' to the first salary offer can leave thousands of dollars on the table.
Ask yourself, ''What range would the company have to pay to find someone like me?''

Many compensation packages can be increased by negotiating for benefits.
In some types of negotiations, purchasing a car for instance, ''playing it cool'' pays off. Not in a salary negotiation.
Should you negotiate at all when the economy is slow and companies are feeling the pinch?
When you survey the salary landscape, seek the highest common ground.
If you're not at least a little embarrassed by the size of your first proposal for compensation, you're not negotiating right.

 

The most important thing you must do in every interview is

The most important thing you must do in every interview is to ask great questions.

The key is to ask great questions- not to ask questions that you should know the answers to already (“What does the position entail?) or questions that make it all about you (“What is your vacation policy?”)

Don't ask questions to check a box. Ask questions out of authentic, genuine curiosity.

Here are 9 great questions you can use or make your own on your next job interview. Of course, don't ask all nine, but choose a couple and tailor them based on your unique circumstances:

1) Who would make the ideal candidate for this position?

2) How will the work I’ll be doing contribute to the organization’s mission?

3) What were the best things about the last person who held this position?

4) What are three ways I can contribute to the company beyond the job description?

5) How can I best contribute to the department’s goals?

6) How do you see me best contributing to the corporate culture and morale?

7) What do you see as the biggest challenges of working here and how can I overcome those challenges?

8) What is your vision for where the company or department will be in one year? In 3-5 years?

9) How can I best help you and the team succeed?

The more research you do in advance, the more you can ask specific questions about the company’s recent news, blog posts, product launches, plans, etc. The more you pay attention throughout the interview, the more you can ask specific questions based on what you hear. But here’s the bottom line:

Ask questions that demonstrate genuine interest in the organization and how you can fit in to their success.

Remember, also, job interviewing is a two-way-street! By asking questions, you can get a much better sense of the organization you’re interviewing at, the team and culture of the company, and the extent to which you’d even want to work there.

(c):http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130606153931-15077789-the-1-thing-you-must-do-in-every-job-interview?trk=tod-home-art-large_0

10 Things to Delete from Your Resume Immediately

Don’t let hiring managers misjudge you by giving them a resume that fails to call attention to your skills and experience that matter to them. Your resume is your introduction to a hiring manager, so it must sell you as the best solution to meet their needs.

The first time a hiring manager sees your resume, she is unlikely to look at it for more than 30-seconds. In fact, she’ll probably spend closer to 15-seconds glancing over it and looking for keywords to find experience that matters to her. Most job applicants create a generic resume that fails to make hiring managers notice them. Instead of hyping the key details that will pique a hiring manager’s interest, their resumes are filled with useless information that hides those most important points within a lot of clutter.

The trick to writing a great resume that stands out from the gigantic stack of resumes hiring managers receive from job applicants is to look at it through an unbiased lens. You need to make a conscious effort to delete the clutter, and chances are at least 20% of the content in your resume is useless clutter. By cutting the clutter, your resume will be stronger and more effective.

Following are 10 things you should delete from your resume immediately. By omitting these elements, your resume will have a significantly better chance of resonating with hiring managers.
1. An Objective Statement - There was a time when every resume began with an objective statement. Today, these subjective statements are little more than fluff that steal space from compelling content.
2. Personal Details


Not only do personal details take away valuable space where you could include useful details about your work experience, but they also look unprofessional. In fact, personal details can do more harm than good in terms of landing an interview. If your resume includes details about how many kids you have, where you grew up, your marital status, your religion, your age, or any other extraneous personal details, delete them right now. Keep in mind, hiring managers aren’t allowed to ask you much of this personal information during the interview process because it could be considered discriminatory. Therefore, these personal details have no place on a professional resume.
3. Personal Interests

Personal interests should never appear on a resume. They steal valuable real estate and are unlikely to have any relevance to a hiring manager. In other words, hiring managers shouldn’t care if you like cooking, fishing, basketball, sewing, or any other hobby. A resume should include work-related content, not personal content.
4. Basic Skills and Obvious Information

Unless a job description specifically mentions basic skills like typing, email, and so on, you shouldn’t include them on your resume. Furthermore, leave out obvious information that steals space from important information. For example, the commonly used statement telling hiring managers that references are available upon request is obvious and unnecessary.
5. Your Picture

A resume should never include a picture of yourself. It makes your resume look unprofessional. If your picture is included anywhere on your resume, delete it now.
6. Every Job You’ve Ever Had

Unless that babysitting job you had in high school is extremely relevant to the job you’re applying for now, leave it off of your resume. Always tailor the content of your resume to the specific job you’re applying for. Your goal should be to show the hiring manager that you can do the job. Don’t tell them your life story. No one cares about unrelated jobs that you’ve had throughout your life, but they will care if important details related to the job they need to fill are not on your resume.
7. Extras You Were Not Asked For

Hiring managers are busy people. If they ask you to send a resume and cover letter, send those two documents and nothing additional. You might be tempted to include copies of recommendation letters, performance reports, transcripts, and other documents that support how wonderful you are, but that extra documentation is unlikely to help you. First, sending extraneous documents tells a hiring manager that you cannot follow directions. Second, it shows a hiring manager that you’re incapable of succinctly showing them that you can do the job within your resume. Third, extra documentation is overwhelming and adds more clutter for a hiring manager to dig through. If you take the time to create an amazing resume, you won’t need to include all of that extra documentation. Your resume will pique the hiring manager’s interest so much that she’ll want to meet with you where you can share all of the additional information about yourself.
8. Too Many Contact Options

You’re popular and busy. You want to make sure that a hiring manager can contact you at a moment’s notice. While that’s very understandable, you should never clutter your resume with a list of contact options. Instead, demonstrate to hiring managers that you can make a decision by choosing one phone number and one email address to include at the top of your resume. It only takes a second for a hiring manager to get frustrated and develop a subconscious negative perception of your resume when she is presented with a long list of contact options and can’t figure out which one to use. Don’t annoy hiring managers. Instead, make it as easy as possible for them to contact you. Believe it or not, they know you might not answer your phone and might have to call them back.
9. Long-winded Descriptions

Remember, hiring managers are very busy and typically have stacks of resumes to review when they have a job to fill. They won’t read through long paragraphs of text describing your experience, so keep your content short and sweet. Use bullet points and action words. Don’t include subjective assessments of your work. Instead, show hiring managers what you’ve done with quantifiable examples that demonstrate your abilities.
10. Mistakes

This might seem like an obvious thing to omit from your resume, but the number of resumes hiring managers look at on a daily basis that include mistakes is very high. Review your resume for spelling, grammar, and formatting mistakes, and then review it again. Use spell check. Read it backwards, and read it out loud. Take a break and read it again. Furthermore, you should never rely solely on proofreading your own work because you won’t catch all of the errors. With that in mind, be sure to give your resume to at least three other people to review, too.

courtsey:http://www.lifed.com/10-things-to-delete-from-your-resume-immediately

 

Reasons Why You Need to Continuously Invest in Your Career

  • You want to be a most valued player.  The career game has changed.  Gone are the days of getting a job and retiring from that job. The informal contract between employer and employee has disappeared. Employers are no longer providing employees with a lifetime job.  We are all responsible for our own jobs and career paths.  Creating your personal brand and marketing yourself is essential to succeeding in the new career game.  Making an investment in a marketing/ personal branding video about your accomplishments and value is well worth the money spent.  You can promote yourself on all social media channels.
  • You want to keep your options open.  The average person stays in a job 2-5 years. If this statistic isn’t reality to you yet, it soon will be.  Ask yourself these questions.

 

“What are the chances of the organization you now work for being bought or merged?”  “How will it affect my job?”  Ignoring these possibilities leaves you very vulnerable and unprepared. Investing in your skill set and identifying the needs in marketplace will serve you wel

 

  • You want to be marketable at all times.  Understanding that marketplace changes are happening faster than ever before reinforces your need to continually invest in your marketability.  Organizations are facing global competition so they will continue to trim “fat” from business processes and payrolls.  Investing in training and sharpening your technical skills gives you the edge over competition.  Mastering interpersonal communication skills (reading, writing, listening and critical thinking) are mandatory.  Even more critical is your ability to spot client needs sometimes even before they know what they need.  Learning to partner with your customer keeps you marketable and in demand.
  • You want to keep your sanity. This may sound weird, but worrying about getting and keeping your job can drive you right off the nearest cliff.  Take the energy that you’re putting into worry and stress and put it to good use by becoming a continuing education master.  Commit to learning and broadening your expertise.


Invest in yourself and your career.  You’re worth it!

Courtesy: http://www.chicagonow.com